Zaman Al Wasl to publish names of 1,500,000 people wanted for Assad regime

Zaman Al Wasl will launch a huge search engine including data and names of 1,500,000 people wanted for the Syrian regime, including warrants of arrest, interrogation and travel ban.

Syria’s first enormous search engine is also including names of 250,000 women.

Zaman al-Wasl seeks to shed the light on the fate of the Syrian disappeared and victims of arbitrarily arrest as well as the search engine aims to provide data and information for the local and international human rights organisations and civil rights advocates.

Syrians in the refuge countries can have a look in the data to find out if they are listed or any of their relatives.

The engin will be launched on March 15, at the seventh anniversary of the Syrian Revolution. The names will be published in three parts.

In 2015, Zaman al-Wasl has obtained the Syrian intelligence archive that includes 1.7 million documents.

The leaked archive contains records from the beginning of 2015 includes people from more than 150 nations not just Syrians. It dates back to the 1960s.

The iron rule of the Assad family, including father and son, made maintaining security services a top priority in order to watch Syrians and foreigners alike, according to NDR.

More than 470,000 people have been killed and 12 millions have been driven from their homes since Syria's revolution erupted in 2011.